When he woke up the next morning, about 8:30, he found the baby on the floor, injured.

The baby's mother says she was at work when the girl was hurt.

On August 8, police re-interviewed Andreas. Believe it or not, his story changed.

In his second interview with police, Andreas told detectives he'd fallen asleep and the baby had fallen off him. When he woke up, he claims he was so angry with himself for allowing the baby to fall that he shook her "pretty hard."

On a scale of 1-10 -- 10 being as hard as he can -- Andreas told police the degree to which he shook his daughter was an 8.

Two days after his second interview with police, a forensic pediatrician determined that the baby suffered a subdural hemorrhage, a bilateral retinal hemorrhage, and significant brain damage caused by lack of oxygen. Each of those injuries, the pediatrician determined, were consistent with a baby getting shaken.

The baby died from her injuries on August 15.

Andreas was interviewed again on August 22. He again told police the story about being mad he'd allowed his daughter to fall. He told police that when he picked her up, she had a "shocked" look on her face. So he shook her.

His next court appearance is scheduled for October 25.

Andreas is only one of several Valley parents suspected of abusing his child. Click here to read about 22-year-old Melissa Chambers and her 26-year-old boyfriend, Travis Darrah. Darrah allegedly beat Chambers' 4-year-old son to death. Click here to read about the Tempe couple who left their 11-month-old baby in a bathtub. Click here to read about 6-year-old Jacob Gibson, who died earlier this week after his parents beat him with a wire hangar. And click here to read the heartbreaking story of Ame Deal, the Phoenix 10-year-old who died after members of her family locked her in a tiny footlocker overnight.